Saturday, February 25, 2012

Increased Merger Activity Expected This Year

The headwinds that plagued the mergers and acquisitions business in 2011 are turning into favorable tailwinds for this year.

"The M&A market will continue to evolve"

“We have a market that is much less volatile than it was in 2011 and we’re seeing an upward bias in equity markets this year, which is positive for the M&A environment,” Andrew Bednar, partner at Perella Weinberg told CNBC. “We’re also seeing a wide open credit market and very low historic rates.”

While big merger deals signal confidence to investors, companies have been hesitant to pull the trigger on transactions due to ongoing fiscal woes in the U.S., debt worries in the euro zone and uncertainties over growth in Asia.

“People don’t quite trust this economy because it has too many externalities feeding up to it,” explained Bednar. “That is giving some people some pause about the foundation of the economy.”

Still, M&A volume has started to see a modest pickup in the first two months of 2012 after tapering off in the second half of last year.

In particular, biotechnology firms have been among the most active M&A participants.

Most notably, Amgen [AMGN  Loading...      ()   ] announced in January it will acquire Micromet [MITI  Loading...      ()   ] for $1.16 billion in an effort for the biotech giant to boost its oncology pipeline. Meanwhile, Celgene [CELG  Loading...      ()   ] said it plans to purchase privately-held Avila Therapeutics for $925 million.

“I think the M&A market will continue to evolve,” said Bednar. “It is still going to include large-scale stock for stock mergers and cash acquisitions, but more and more, we’re seeing split-ups, split-offs, spin-offs and more complicated transactions.”

Earlier this week, Sears [SHLD  Loading...      ()   ] announced several moves to increase liquidity, including the sale of 11 stores to General Growth Properties [GGP  Loading...      ()   ] for $270 million, and the spinoff of 1,250 Hometown and Outlet stores to shareholders.

“[The M&A market] will be a less plain vanilla and more complex.”

Follow JeeYeon Park on Twitter: document.write("");document.write(""+"@"+"JeeYeonParkCNBC");document.write('');

Questions?  Comments? Email us atdocument.write(""); document.write("marketinsider"+"@"+"cnbc.com");document.write('');


View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment